Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!

HM: I found some a few years back. Never tried them fresh, but they aren't that great dried, seemed about equal to cubensis. The ones I found blued very strongly, so they're probably high in psilocin and a lot more potent fresh.

'Holy Jesus'- Workman,
you really know how to do it, aren't you?! And you're a great photographer, too! (if this pix are yours)

It's such a pitty that there are no other species in Germany than the good old Semilanceata (which I started growing from a print I finally took this year) and the Cyanscens which is rare in the Mid-west, where I live. (but I surely grow it in the garden)

There is the Inocybe Aeruginascens and also Gymnopilus Purpuratus also known to be found in the east but I also never found it around here...

So again my question- are you offering prints only for money @ sporeworks??? Or is there a little chance of getting one simply because I love mushroom growing and not being interested in 'dealing' with them. (I got all my prints/mycelia for free and donate them also for free)

That picture looks very similar to the azure isolate that ive been working with. I assume that this mushroom would be fairly similarly related to the cyanescens group of Psilocybes. I would love to trade for some of your rarer species - i have aucklandii, eucalypta, and a few other weirdies.

I am always up for trades (noncubensis species) but I can't just give out spores for free. There is a tendency for people to take advantage. I am pretty overwhelmed with new material at the moment but I hope to expand my lab before summer.

I was able to get and maintain a good culture of P. arcana but beds died back when planted outside. I noticed that some of the images of wild arcana show mushrooms growing directly from logs and branches. Attempts with colonized dowels in alders logs shows some promise but no mushrooms yet.

--------------------Research funded by the patrons of
The Spore WorksExotic Spore Supply
Reinvesting 25% of Sales Towards Basic Research and Species Identification